Have you come across any cases of Alzheimer's disease in 25-year-old individuals infected with herpes simplex virus, which affects approximately two-thirds of the population?
You can get Alzheimer's when young, though it is rare.
But as explained earlier, the viral infections linked to chronic diseases and cancers are low-level, slow-burn, smouldering infections that take decades to cause sufficient cumulative damage to manifest as disease symptoms.
Are you familiar with the lifecycle of viruses, and how slow-burn latent infections and intracellular viral infections are different to fulminant acute infections?
Slow-burn persistent infections are different to the raging acute infections we get when we first catch a virus.
We all know what an acute viral infection is like, since we have all had colds, flus, sore throats, gastrointestinal infections with vomiting, etc. You often feel terrible when you have one of these acute infection, because there is massive amount of virus in the body, and the mother of all battles as the immune system races to create the right antibodies to combat the infection.
Once the antibodies are designed and created by the B-cells (which takes a few days), then you start to get on top of the acute infection, and your symptoms begin to resolve.
For persistent infections however, we don't normally notice any symptoms, because the viral activity is so minimal, the infection just smoulders away in the tissues at very low levels. This is why it takes the virus a long time to create the cumulative damage that leads to a disease.
For example, heart valve disease is associated with a smouldering enterovirus infection of the valve tissues. Over many years, the connective tissue in these valves is slowly damaged, and eventually the heart is not able to pump blood efficiently. This then leads to symptoms such as episodes of breathlessness, due to insufficient oxygen being pumped around the body. But if you research into heart valve disease, you will find it is a very slow disease, people have if for decades, and it may only slowly progress.
Another example is the link between breast cancer and bovine leukaemia virus. A large percentage of the population are found to have bovine leukaemia virus (BLV) in their breast tissue. The cow virus is thought to have passed into human populations around 10,000 years ago, during the agricultural revolution, when we started drinking the milk of other animals. BLV is routinely found in raw milk today, but not in pasteurised milk. So it is thought most likely that the virus passed into human populations thousands of years ago, and is now passed from human to human, rather than us getting it from cow milk.
So many of of us have this bovine virus in our breast tissues. But it may take decades of quietly living in those breast tissues before it triggers a breast cancer.
Edited by Hip, 16 June 2023 - 02:03 PM.